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Top tips for improving your wildlife photography

jw5

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Habitat​

Here's another example. This time the location is Tanzania during Africa's great wildebeest migration. At its greatest concentration, the herds number nearly two million animals.
 

jw5

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Personality​

And now the isolated close-up shot of a single wildebeest lends the animal a unique personality. So, you see how character and environment work together.
 

jw5

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Think small​

While busy capturing the bigger picture and animal kingdom celebs like lions, tigers, and bears, it's easy to overlook the little guys. A wildlife photographer is an observer of all that's around them, and that includes insects and other tiny critters. Have a lens handy to record the world in miniature.
 

jw5

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Work the light​

Photographers work with light, and the best light, the so-called "golden hour," is first thing in the morning as the sun rises, and the 60 minutes or so before sunset. Get used to getting up in the dark and being in position by daybreak to capture images like this one: a Eurasian reed warbler in full voice during the dawn chorus.
 

jw5

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Remains of the day​

Likewise as the day ends, a beautiful honey-hued light burnishes the landscape to create a warm wash of color that's hugely complimentary to all sorts of subject matter, including wildlife.
 

jw5

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Use camouflage​

You won't win any best-dressed prizes, but investing in a ghillie suit (a type of camouflage clothing designed to resemble the background environment) will save you ending up being sequestered in a cramped hide all day.
 

jw5

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Camera trap​

Consider setting up a camera trap to photograph more elusive animals. The device uses infrared light and a motion detector to trip the shutter automatically.
 

jw5

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Caught in the act​

Camera trap imagery can produce some fantastic results. Here, a red deer is seen at night foraging while totally unaware that its good side has just been captured.
 

jw5

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Working the environment​

Wildlife photography is not for the fainthearted. Besides the aforementioned patience required to do the job, photographers must be prepared to go where the work is, and that is usually well out of anyone's normal comfort zone.
 

jw5

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Develop a story​

While a single image of an especially rare species can draw gasps of admiration from envious colleagues, photographs of a more everyday variety can also be winners. Look at this cute duo: two brown bear cubs playing in a world of their own. Wildlife photography is about capturing the moment, but it's also about telling a story.
 

jw5

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Be ready for the unexpected​

You don't have to be on safari to come away with something special. As you develop an eye for a picture, your visual senses are increasingly honed for the offbeat. A seemingly ordinary domestic farm scene is suddenly turned into a blink-and-you'll-miss-it moment as a gaggle of geese waddle over the crest of a hill. The moral of the tale: always have a camera at hand.
 

jw5

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Underwater photography​

A specialist area of wildlife photography is photographing underwater. The laws of physics change when using a camera below the waves, so best to learn the basics on land before venturing below the surface.
 

jw5

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Become a conservationist​

Becoming a wildlife photographer is to join an elite band of men and women passionate about nature and the welfare of the environment. Interact on social media with them, join online forums, and become more vocal about animal conservation and you'll learn so much more besides how to operate a camera.
 

karizma

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Thanks for information. For enhancing my wildlife photography, I've found invaluable tips at article source These insights, coupled with my passion for capturing the beauty of nature, have been changed my photo style.
 
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